3/4 Front Glamour 2005 Suzuki Forenza
  • 3/4 Front Glamour 2005 Suzuki Forenza
  • OEM Exterior Primary  2005 Suzuki Forenza
  • 3/4 Front Glamour 2005 Suzuki Forenza
  • OEM Exterior Primary  2005 Suzuki Forenza
  • CarsDirect Price Tag
    VehicleMinMax
    2005 Suzuki Forenza N/A N/A
    2012 Ford Focus $22,995 $22,995
    2012 Toyota Corolla N/A N/A
    2012 Hyundai Elantra Touring N/A N/A
    Average $22,995 $22,995
    Used Car Price Range

    Currently Unavailable
  • Monthly Payment Calendar
    VehicleMinMax
    2005 Suzuki Forenza N/A N/A
    2012 Ford Focus $391 $391
    2012 Toyota Corolla N/A N/A
    2012 Hyundai Elantra Touring N/A N/A
    Average $391 $391

    Based On: 10% down, 5% APR, 60 months

    Estimated Monthly Payment

    Currently Unavailable
  • MPG
    MPGcityhwy
    2005 Suzuki Forenza 21 30
    2012 Ford Focus 27 37
    2012 Toyota Corolla 27 34
    2012 Hyundai Elantra Touring 23 31
    Average 25 33
    MPG

    21 City | 30 Highway
 
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OVERVIEW
When you're shopping in the $15,000 new-car market, chances are that head-turning style and high-performance aren't first on your priority list. No, more likely you're looking to get as much car as you possibly can for as few dollars as possible.

It is into this hotly contested, price- and feature-sensitive market that Suzuki enters with two new models this year. The Suzuki Forenza Wagon and Reno are new to Suzuki's Forenza family for the 2005 model year. Both are based on the Forenza sedan, which was introduced as an all-new model for 2004. The underpinnings of the three body styles are mechanically identical. The major difference among them is exterior styling and a few trim choices.

From the standpoint of stuff for the money, the Forenza family of cars does well. They are well equipped even at the base trim level, and retail for less than most of their competitors.

The Reno is the fun member of the family. Its job is to be Suzuki's pretty face, attracting buyers who might otherwise consider cars sitting on Scion showroom floors, or perhaps the sleek lines of the Mazda 3, to which it bears a slight resemblance. The Forenza Wagon's most compelling feature is just that: it's a wagon. Larger than the Chevy Aveo and Kia Rio, it costs significantly less than comparably sized wagons such as the Ford Focus ZXW or the Toyota Matrix. The Forenza sedan is designed to offer a strong value in a sea of value-priced compact sedans, no easy job. It does this by providing side-impact airbags as standard equipment; they're extra-cost options on the 2005 Honda Civic, Toyota Corolla and Ford Focus. Other features that are optional on the big brand names are standard on the Forenza, including air conditioning, power windows and door locks, and a CD player.

Suzuki is able to keep prices low because, despite the Japanese nameplate, the cars are built in Korea by Daewoo, courtesy of General Motors, which owns a stake in both Daewoo and Suzuki. General Motors benefits by keeping its Daewoo plant active, and Suzuki gets a full line of cars to draw more people into its dealerships.

The cars resulting from this complex genealogy are not ground breaking; few cars in this segment ever are. Breaking ground costs money, after all, so breaking ground is a job usually done by more expensive vehicles. However, these cars are strong on features, have warranties, and are good values for the money, even if they are short on pizzazz.

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